
Random House © 2007, 320 pages
Matthew King’s wife Joanie is in a coma and not expected to survive. Matt thus finds himself suddenly thrust into the role of single parent to their two daughters, aged 10 and 17. One day that will mean the normal things–getting the girls up for school and taking them to dentists’ appointments, the minutiae of parenting. But for now the situation is extreme. He needs to explain to them that the doctors are taking their mother off life support, and he has to walk them thcoarse the process of saying goodbye to her. He also finds himself confronting for the first time the ugly fact that both girls are completely out of control, juvenile delinquents or just shy of it. Meanwhile, Matt has responsibilities to other people: he has set himself the tinquire of letting everyone else know what’s happening to Joanie–their friends and family and, as he finds out, the man his wife has been having an affair with. Even he, Matt decides, has the right to say goodbye.
Given the subject matter of Kaui
The Descendants is very well-written and highly readable. Don’t be turned off by its grim subject matter.
Original post by Debra Hamel















